| Literature DB >> 35746953 |
Xueyan Hou1,2, Andrew J Clarke3, Mohammed Azzouzi2, Jun Yan2, Flurin Eisner2, Xingyuan Shi2, Mark F Wyatt4, T John S Dennis5,6, Zhe Li7, Jenny Nelson2.
Abstract
Environmental stability remains a major challenge for the commercialisation of organic solar cells and degradation pathways remain poorly understood. Designing materials for improved device stability requires an understanding of the relationship between the properties of the donor or acceptor molecule and different degradation mechanisms. Here we study the correlations between various molecular parameters of the fullerene derivative bis-PCBM and the degradation rate of polymer:bis-PCBM organic solar cells, based on the same carbazole-alt-benzothiadiazole polymer, in aerobic and anaerobic conditions. We compare eight high purity bis-PCBM isomers with different electronic, chemical and packing properties along with PCBM and the mixture of bis isomers. In the case of aerobic photodegradation, we find that device degradation rate is positively correlated to the LUMO energy of the bis-PCBM isomer and to the degree of crystallinity of the isomer, while the correlation of degradation with driving force for epoxide formation is unclear. These results support the idea that in these samples, aerobic photodegradation proceeds via superoxide formation by the photogenerated polaron on the fullerene, followed by further chemical reaction. In the absence of air, photodegradation rate is correlated with molecular structure, supporting the mechanism of microstructural degradation via fullerene dimerization. The approach and findings presented here show how control of specific molecular parameters through chemical design can serve as a strategy to enhance stability of organic solar cells. This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry.Entities:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35746953 PMCID: PMC9134990 DOI: 10.1039/d1tc05768e
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Mater Chem C Mater ISSN: 2050-7526 Impact factor: 8.067
Fig. 1The molecular structures of the bis-PCBM isomers selected for degradation study. The trans, cis and e type positions on C60 cage are indicated with the first addend on the pole.
Molecular parameter statistics of selected bis-PCBM isomers. Total energies are given relative to the total energy of optimised structure 6. LUMO energies are estimated from reduction potentials measured by CV. The values are identical to those reported for the same isomers in ref. 25
| Isomer | Type | LUMO/eV | Shortest C | Longest C | Side-chain distance/Å | Total energy/meV | Largest epoxidation energy/eV |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2.1.2 |
| −3.84 | 1.377 | 1.395 | 11.20 | −132.52 | 1.61 |
| 3.2.1 |
| −3.78 | 1.377 | 1.394 | 10.08 | −149.66 | 1.65 |
| 2.2 |
| −3.82 | 1.378 | 1.395 | 10.62 | −119.46 | 1.64 |
| 3.2.2 |
| −3.73 | 1.378 | 1.395 | 9.61 | −119.73 | 1.63 |
| 5.1 |
| −3.79 | 1.377 | 1.394 | 7.45 | −149.39 | 1.64 |
| 3.3.2 |
| −3.79 | 1.378 | 1.394 | 9.17 | −171.43 | 1.64 |
| 5.2.2 |
| −3.80 | 1.363 | 1.393 | 6.89 | −72.93 | 1.68 |
| 6 |
| −3.82 | 1.358 | 1.395 | 6.29 | 0 | 1.71 |
Fig. 2Fraction of initial polymer absorbance at 571 nm that is lost after 6 h exposure to AM 1.5G illumination in air for each PCDTBT:fullerene blend films as a function of the measured LUMO level of the acceptor. Also indicated is the absorbance loss of the pure polymer film. The absorbance measurements of neat fullerene films are not shown since there was no significant change after 6 h illumination, in agreement with results in the literature.[30]
Fig. 3Photovoltaic parameters (a) power conversion efficiency (PCE), (b) short circuit current density Jsc, (c) open circuit voltage Voc and (d) fill factor FF of PCDTBT:fullerene devices as a function of the time for which the active layer had been exposed to simulated AM 1.5G illumination in air prior to electrode deposition. All performace parameters are normalised to the value measured for a device whose active layer was not exposed to air.
Fig. 4Correlation between the PCE decay rate and molecular parameters: (a) crystallinity (note that the order of isomers within each group, amorphous and crystalline, is not significant), (b) LUMO energy estimated from CV measurements, (c) calculated total energy, (d) largest calculated epoxidation energy.
Fig. 5Evolution of normalised device parameters of the PCDTBT:bis-PCBM devices under continuous 1 sun intensity illumination in a nitrogen atmosphere. All parameters are normalised to their initial performance.
Fig. 6Comparison between PCE decay rate and the fullerene molecular parameters of the PCDTBT:bis-PCBM devices degraded anaerobically: (a) crystallinity and side-chain distance; (b) total energy.